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Is that process writing to a file that adds to your own disk quota?
Posts: 7593 | Registered: Sep 2006
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Blayne Bradley
unregistered
posted
yes. But I dont know if my disk quota is "mine" and has a hard limit or if the limit is simply however large the disk space for all accounts is.
I notice my admin asking me to delete some overly large files last year.
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Why is your program running in a process that you can't kill? (How does that happen?)
I'm asking out of curiosity. I'm linux illiterate.
(illinuxerate? Ouch. I guess some portmanteaus should remain unwritten.)
Posts: 4287 | Registered: Mar 2005
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Blayne Bradley
unregistered
posted
not in linux, but in Perl. I had a webpage, that sent a request to the webserver which used a perl script which I forgot to increment the loop so it became an infinite loop.
quote:Originally posted by ketchupqueen: I KNEW this was a Blayne thread as soon as I saw the title.
Put this one in the Hall of Blayne.
Hehe, same here. Anything like this or "HELP! The NPCs in my MMORPG are becoming self-aware..." tips me off in a heartbeat.
Posts: 349 | Registered: Jul 2006
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quote:I contacted my professor he hasn't gotten back to me.
Your professor is not the IT department. It has been my experience that the Computer Science teachers at most colleges would be hard-pressed to find the on buttons.
Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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posted
I guess I should be glad that when I deploy buggy amateurish web applications to servers I at least have the admin rights to go in and kill processes or restart the server.
Posts: 4287 | Registered: Mar 2005
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posted
Now granted, this was on the CS undergrad server, so it was somewhat to be expected, but in my first Unix assignment that dealt with fork(), I spawned a couple hundred zombie processes once. Though at least I killed my process, and the system cleaned up the rest eventually.
posted
I wonder what it would have been like if Blayne had decided to study music, or gone to culinary school, or something.
"Help! I can't resolve my German Neopolitan-2 without introducing parallel motion... do you have to resolve the leading tone if you're going to a I-6/4, or is that a V 6/4, and what's the difference????
How do I put a C# Eb D G pitch class set into lowest reduced order, and what's the vector? What's the vector!@@!*%?"
The answer to that last one, btw, is (0,1,2,6) and [1,1,4]. So don't act like music theory is that easy.
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"I can't find the right flavor to cut through the wine I'm using for this glaze omg everything is on fire forever"
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quote:I contacted my professor he hasn't gotten back to me.
Your professor is not the IT department. It has been my experience that the Computer Science teachers at most colleges would be hard-pressed to find the on buttons.
Haha. Yeah, sometimes we feel that way about our CS professor, too. Unfortunately, since I started teaching this one entry-level computer course, that blew the stereotype away for our college.
Posts: 1813 | Registered: Apr 2001
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Blayne Bradley
unregistered
posted
Our teachers ARE the IT department.
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That seems like a very odd arrangement. What do the other teachers do if they have a problem while your teachers are in class?
Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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Blayne Bradley
unregistered
posted
They have overlapping scheduales and some TA's but anyways my teacher read my email and fixed the problem.
If I hadnt deleted it every time it reached a certain size i imagine itve had been a gig by now.
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Amateur... I once killed Citibank's primary web server. You know, the ones that host www.citibank.com, one of the most heavily trafficked financial services site on the 'net...
Posts: 3486 | Registered: Sep 2002
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posted
Pssh, I know a kid who once took out all of UMich's North Campus with a single packet sniffer. Don't ask me how, I don't think he really knows himself!
When I was first learning Perl I thought it'd be fun to make a self spawning program that ran itself just to see how nuts it'd get. So I wrote a program that copied itself into a file and then ran that file. Needless to say the result was not pretty. Happily enough I was SSHed into the server and I hadn't used nohup, so when I killed my session it killed all the spawned processes too.
Posts: 3295 | Registered: Jun 2004
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posted
Right. I had to get up in the morning at ten o'clock at night, half an hour before I went to bed, eat a lump of cold poison, work twenty-nine hours a day down mill, and pay mill owner for permission to come to work, and when we got home, our Dad would kill us, and dance about on our graves singing "Hallelujah."
Posts: 1080 | Registered: Apr 2006
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quote:"Help! I can't resolve my German Neopolitan-2 without introducing parallel motion... do you have to resolve the leading tone if you're going to a I-6/4, or is that a V 6/4, and what's the difference????
Ok, lemme try--you have to use an inversion of the German Neopolitan so you're using parallel 4ths instead of 5ths. Still resolves to either the cadential 6/4 or some dominant harmony. Though if you're trying to get rid of ANY parallel motion, you have to do some funky voice leading.
If you use a ROOT position German Neopolitan, you can safely resolve do a V4/3 by keeping the 3rd and 7th as common tones.
posted
Sounds good to me. I have written a grand total of 2 flat II chords in all the music I've ever composed... that I can think. I have never used a Neapolitan- so to be honest I kind of forget how they function. All you pianists can think in chords... it's so annoying when I can't do it at all. Don't even ask me to take a chord progression dictation- it would read like this:
I, IV, something 7.... vi? I...6.... something....N2 something....V6/4 I.
Now, there is no amount of funky voiceleading that excuses voice crossing in a close position chord, so eliminating parallel 4ths is out. You don't have to anyway because the overtones don't match, so it's not "wrong."
I have to say though, as soon as I was done with Romantic period theory I started writing parallel fifths into everything- especially parallel 5ths outlining minor 7th chords. There's nothing better than a floating Debussy line. Chears for stability, jeers for Neapolitan Angstyness.
Posts: 9912 | Registered: Nov 2005
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One thing I love about guitarists is their chord voicings. Pianists get stuck in root position and play all the notes of the chord, not knowing the best ones to double or leave out.
I definitely want to go back to school someday for my Master's in Music. For now, piano tuning is great.
Oh--and I can't say I like the Debussy line any more than some Wagnerian sturm und drang. Love them both.
Posts: 1314 | Registered: Jan 2006
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